The ink came in tubes.
Old copy machine with blue ink.
They have now been replaced by digital duplicators scanners laser printers and photocopiers but for many years they were the primary means of reproducing documents for limited run distribution the duplicator was pioneered by thomas edison and david gestetner with gestetner dominating the market up until.
A ditto machine was a primitive photocopier that used a solvent like methylated spirits or ammonia to transfer ink from the master copy the template if you will onto other pieces of paper.
We just cleaned it out to change color.
However the cost of early photocopiers was quite high.
I guess we changed those.
The master for the ditto was only good for a limited number of copies as the solvent spirit dissolved the surface of the ink on the master allowing it to be transferred to the special paper.
Ideally each ink color would have its own screen.
Duplicating machines were the predecessors of modern document reproduction technology.
Both pieces of paper are stained with purple ink because they went through a machine invented in 1923 called a ditto machine or spirit duplicator.
The blue process while a number of technologies that used photosensitive paper to copy documents were invented beginning in 1842 the first of these technologies that was commercially important was the blue process while the blue process was well established in europe by the early 1870s it was not introduced in the us until 1877.
Ditto machines made the purple copies that faded over time faster with exposure to light.
There were two cylinders with a silkscreen belt running on them.
Mimeographs along with spirit duplicators and hectographs were a common technology in printing small quantities as in office work classroom materials and church bulletins.
The stencil duplicator or mimeograph machine is a low cost duplicating machine that works by forcing ink through a stencil onto paper.
It did not always produce high quality copies and the ink could be messy.
In the late 1960s.
A mechanical duplicator that produced copies by pressing ink often by manually turning a handle onto paper through openings cut in a stencil.
The mimeograph process should not be confused with the spirit duplicator process.
It didn t use a drum.